Bring it On - Capitalism and Prosperity v. Socialism and Poverty

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
You do research on things you believe to be common knowledge? I'll bet not.
Well, I'm not in the habit of taking things at face value or accepting them as "common knowledge" without first ascertaining whether they're true or not. Call me picky...
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
More crime is caused by rich people than poor people in America. The only thing that tax cuts for the rich do are indebt a nation while making its rich people richer. When rich people get extra money from tax cuts, it just makes them richer. Cutting high-end income taxes makes rich people richer and raises a nation’s debt but does nothing else.

 

Idolater

"Foundation of the World" Dispensationalist χρ
Then as before you need to do some research before issuing a statement without substance. No one person invented the internet although Tim Berners-Lee created the world wide web. The origins of how we got to where we are now go back to many different people including from America and the UK so it's childish to pretend that the internet is an American invention just as it would be for me to claim it was a British one. Not only childish in fact but stupid.

THE ORIGINS OF THE INTERNET
The origins of the internet are rooted in the USA of the 1950s.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
THE ORIGINS OF THE INTERNET
The origins of the internet are rooted in the USA of the 1950s.
No argument. The internet itself wasn't invented by one person from one country alone however. Tim Berners-Lee probably played the most pivotal role in what we have today:

WHO INVENTED THE INTERNET?​

No one person invented the internet. When networking technology was first developed, a number of scientists and engineers brought their research together to create the ARPANET. Later, other inventors’ creations paved the way for the web as we know it today.

• PAUL BARAN (1926–2011)​

An engineer whose work overlapped with ARPA’s research. In 1959 he joined an American think tank, the RAND Corporation, and was asked to research how the US Air Force could keep control of its fleet if a nuclear attack ever happened. In 1964 Baran proposed a communication network with no central command point. If one point was destroyed, all surviving points would still be able to communicate with each other. He called this a distributed network.

• LAWRENCE ROBERTS (1937–2018)​

Chief scientist at ARPA, responsible for developing computer networks. Paul Baran’s idea appealed to Roberts, and he began to work on the creation of a distributed network.

• LEONARD KLEINROCK (1934–)​

An American scientist who worked towards the creation of a distributed network alongside Lawrence Roberts.

• DONALD DAVIES (1924–2000)​

A British scientist who, at the same time as Roberts and Kleinrock, was developing similar technology at the National Physical Laboratory in Middlesex.

• BOB KAHN (1938–) AND VINT CERF (1943–)​

American computer scientists who developed TCP/IP, the set of protocols that governs how data moves through a network. This helped the ARPANET evolve into the internet we use today. Vint Cerf is credited with the first written use of the word ‘internet’.
When asked to explain my role in the creation of the internet, I generally use the example of a city. I helped to build the roads—the infrastructure that gets things from point A to point B.
—Vint Cerf, 2007

• PAUL MOCKAPETRIS (1948–) AND JON POSTEL (1943–98)​

Inventors of DNS, the ‘phone book of the internet’.

• TIM BERNERS-LEE (1955–)​

Creator of the World Wide Web who developed many of the principles we still use today, such as HTML, HTTP, URLs and web browsers.
There was no “Eureka!” moment. It was not like the legendary apple falling on Newton’s head to demonstrate the concept of gravity. Inventing the World Wide Web involved my growing realisation that there was a power in arranging ideas in an unconstrained, weblike way. And that awareness came to me through precisely that kind of process. The Web arose as the answer to an open challenge, through the swirling together of influences, ideas, and realisations from many sides.
—Tim Berners-Lee, Weaving the Web, 1999

• MARC ANDREESSEN (1971–)​

Inventor of Mosaic, the first widely-used web browser.
 

TomO

Get used to it.
Hall of Fame
No argument. The internet itself wasn't invented by one person from one country alone however. Tim Berners-Lee probably played the most pivotal role in what we have today:

WHO INVENTED THE INTERNET?​

No one person invented the internet. When networking technology was first developed, a number of scientists and engineers brought their research together to create the ARPANET. Later, other inventors’ creations paved the way for the web as we know it today.

• PAUL BARAN (1926–2011)​

An engineer whose work overlapped with ARPA’s research. In 1959 he joined an American think tank, the RAND Corporation, and was asked to research how the US Air Force could keep control of its fleet if a nuclear attack ever happened. In 1964 Baran proposed a communication network with no central command point. If one point was destroyed, all surviving points would still be able to communicate with each other. He called this a distributed network.

• LAWRENCE ROBERTS (1937–2018)​

Chief scientist at ARPA, responsible for developing computer networks. Paul Baran’s idea appealed to Roberts, and he began to work on the creation of a distributed network.

• LEONARD KLEINROCK (1934–)​

An American scientist who worked towards the creation of a distributed network alongside Lawrence Roberts.

• DONALD DAVIES (1924–2000)​

A British scientist who, at the same time as Roberts and Kleinrock, was developing similar technology at the National Physical Laboratory in Middlesex.

• BOB KAHN (1938–) AND VINT CERF (1943–)​

American computer scientists who developed TCP/IP, the set of protocols that governs how data moves through a network. This helped the ARPANET evolve into the internet we use today. Vint Cerf is credited with the first written use of the word ‘internet’.

• PAUL MOCKAPETRIS (1948–) AND JON POSTEL (1943–98)​

Inventors of DNS, the ‘phone book of the internet’.

• TIM BERNERS-LEE (1955–)​

Creator of the World Wide Web who developed many of the principles we still use today, such as HTML, HTTP, URLs and web browsers.

• MARC ANDREESSEN (1971–)​

Inventor of Mosaic, the first widely-used web browser.
Yeah...Those guys did some stuff but it was Al Gore. :unsure:
 

7djengo7

This space intentionally left blank
When rich people get extra money from tax cuts, it just makes them richer.

It's things like this by which you so frequently demonstrate yourself to be a fraud (and thus, a hypocrite also, since you like to spend your time self-righteously accusing others of being frauds). You know that nobody gets money by cuts in taxation. Nobody could be stupid enough to think that to cut taxes is to give money to those the taxation of whom is lessened. Yet, you pretend to think that it is; and by that pretense of yours you demonstrate your fraudulence. Think about it, stupid: If a thug accosts a man and puts a gun to his head demanding that he fork over $100, but the threatened man only has $50 and in fear for his life hands it to the mugger, and the mugger decides to be content with just taking the $50 from him, the robbed/taxed man has not gained any money by his being robbed/taxed of only $50 rather than having been robbed/taxed of $100 or more.​
 
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